Landscape and climate change threats to wetlands of North and Central America

被引:1
|
作者
William J. Mitsch
Maria E. Hernandez
机构
[1] The Ohio State University,Wilma H. Schiermeier Olentangy River Wetland Research Park
[2] Institute of Ecology,Biotechnological Management of Resources Network
来源
Aquatic Sciences | 2013年 / 75卷
关键词
Wetlands and climate change; North American wetlands; Central American wetlands; Wetland status; Wetland threats;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
North and Central America has a combined total of 2.5 million km2 of wetlands, with 51 % in Canada, 46 % in the USA, and the remainder in subtropical and tropical Mexico and Central America. Loss rates are well known for the conterminous USA and for parts of Canada but poorly understood for Mexico and Central America. Wetlands of North America continue to be threatened due to drainage for agriculture and urban development, extreme coastal and river management, water pollution from upstream watersheds, peat mining, waterfowl management, and more recently climate change. Human use of wetlands in this region are many, including receiving ecosystem services such as water purification, flood regulation, climate regulation, and direct provisioning benefits for many cultures living in and among wetlands, especially in the Louisiana Delta and in Mexico and Central America. Climate change affects will cause wetland impacts on coastal wetlands due to sea level rise and on inland wetlands due to changes in precipitation, air temperature, and river discharges. Wetlands, in turn, have a major role in the storage of carbon in boreal regions of Canada and with carbon sequestration in temperate and tropical wetlands of the Americas.
引用
收藏
页码:133 / 149
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Landscape and climate change threats to wetlands of North and Central America
    Mitsch, William J.
    Hernandez, Maria E.
    AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2013, 75 (01) : 133 - 149
  • [2] The vulnerability of wetlands to climate change: A hydrologic landscape perspective
    Winter, TC
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 2000, 36 (02): : 305 - 311
  • [3] Megacities and Climate Change in North America
    Studer Noguez, Maria Isabel
    Koolemans-Beynen, Johanna
    LATIN AMERICAN POLICY, 2010, 1 (01) : 75 - 97
  • [4] Climate Change Regionalism in North America
    Selin, Henrik
    VanDeveer, Stacy D.
    REVIEW OF POLICY RESEARCH, 2011, 28 (03) : 295 - 304
  • [5] Chagas Disease 2 Climate change and Trypanosoma cruzi transmission in North and central America
    Forsyth, Colin
    Higuita, Nelson Ivan Agudelo
    Hamer, Sarah A.
    Ibarra-Cerdena, Carlos N.
    Valdez-Tah, Alba
    Granados, Paula Stigler
    Hamer, Gabriel L.
    Vingiello, Michael
    Beatty, Norman L.
    LANCET MICROBE, 2024, 5 (10):
  • [6] Climate change and the aridification of North America COMMENT
    Overpeck, Jonathan T.
    Udall, Bradley
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2020, 117 (22) : 11856 - 11858
  • [7] Climate Change and Infections on the Move in North America
    Hauser, Naomi
    Conlon, Kathryn C.
    Desai, Angel
    Kobziar, Leda N.
    INFECTION AND DRUG RESISTANCE, 2021, 14 : 5711 - 5723
  • [8] Landscape simplification, urbanization, biological invasions, and climate change: a review of the major threats to native coccinellids in Central Chile
    Grez, Audrey
    Zaviezo, Tania
    ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA, 2024, 172 (06) : 460 - 466
  • [9] Wetlands of Central America
    Ellison A.M.
    Wetlands Ecology and Management, 2004, 12 (1) : 3 - 55
  • [10] Herbarium specimens reveal the footprint of climate change on flowering trends across north-central North America
    Calinger, Kellen M.
    Queenborough, Simon
    Curtis, Peter S.
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2013, 16 (08) : 1037 - 1044